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1.
Res Sq ; 2023 Dec 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37131620

RESUMO

Some protein binding pairs exhibit extreme specificities that functionally insulate them from homologs. Such pairs evolve mostly by accumulating single-point mutations, and mutants are selected if their affinity exceeds the threshold required for function1-4. Thus, homologous and high-specificity binding pairs bring to light an evolutionary conundrum: how does a new specificity evolve while maintaining the required affinity in each intermediate5,6? Until now, a fully functional single-mutation path that connects two orthogonal pairs has only been described where the pairs were mutationally close thus enabling experimental enumeration of all intermediates2. We present an atomistic and graph-theoretical framework for discovering low molecular strain single-mutation paths that connect two extant pairs, enabling enumeration beyond experimental capability. We apply it to two orthogonal bacterial colicin endonuclease-immunity pairs separated by 17 interface mutations7. We were not able to find a strain-free and functional path in the sequence space defined by the two extant pairs. But including mutations that bridge amino acids that cannot be exchanged through single-nucleotide mutations led us to a strain-free 19-mutation trajectory that is completely viable in vivo. Our experiments show that the specificity switch is remarkably abrupt, resulting from only one radical mutation on each partner. Furthermore, each of the critical specificity-switch mutations increases fitness, demonstrating that functional divergence could be driven by positive Darwinian selection. These results reveal how even radical functional changes in an epistatic fitness landscape may evolve.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(49): E11455-E11464, 2018 12 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30459276

RESUMO

Photorespiration recycles ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) oxygenation product, 2-phosphoglycolate, back into the Calvin Cycle. Natural photorespiration, however, limits agricultural productivity by dissipating energy and releasing CO2 Several photorespiration bypasses have been previously suggested but were limited to existing enzymes and pathways that release CO2 Here, we harness the power of enzyme and metabolic engineering to establish synthetic routes that bypass photorespiration without CO2 release. By defining specific reaction rules, we systematically identified promising routes that assimilate 2-phosphoglycolate into the Calvin Cycle without carbon loss. We further developed a kinetic-stoichiometric model that indicates that the identified synthetic shunts could potentially enhance carbon fixation rate across the physiological range of irradiation and CO2, even if most of their enzymes operate at a tenth of Rubisco's maximal carboxylation activity. Glycolate reduction to glycolaldehyde is essential for several of the synthetic shunts but is not known to occur naturally. We, therefore, used computational design and directed evolution to establish this activity in two sequential reactions. An acetyl-CoA synthetase was engineered for higher stability and glycolyl-CoA synthesis. A propionyl-CoA reductase was engineered for higher selectivity for glycolyl-CoA and for use of NADPH over NAD+, thereby favoring reduction over oxidation. The engineered glycolate reduction module was then combined with downstream condensation and assimilation of glycolaldehyde to ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, thus providing proof of principle for a carbon-conserving photorespiration pathway.


Assuntos
Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Glicolatos/metabolismo , Fotossíntese/fisiologia , Simulação por Computador , Engenharia Metabólica , Modelos Biológicos , Engenharia de Proteínas , Ribulose-Bifosfato Carboxilase/metabolismo , Biologia Sintética
3.
Mol Cell ; 72(1): 178-186.e5, 2018 10 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30270109

RESUMO

Substantial improvements in enzyme activity demand multiple mutations at spatially proximal positions in the active site. Such mutations, however, often exhibit unpredictable epistatic (non-additive) effects on activity. Here we describe FuncLib, an automated method for designing multipoint mutations at enzyme active sites using phylogenetic analysis and Rosetta design calculations. We applied FuncLib to two unrelated enzymes, a phosphotriesterase and an acetyl-CoA synthetase. All designs were active, and most showed activity profiles that significantly differed from the wild-type and from one another. Several dozen designs with only 3-6 active-site mutations exhibited 10- to 4,000-fold higher efficiencies with a range of alternative substrates, including hydrolysis of the toxic organophosphate nerve agents soman and cyclosarin and synthesis of butyryl-CoA. FuncLib is implemented as a web server (http://FuncLib.weizmann.ac.il); it circumvents iterative, high-throughput experimental screens and opens the way to designing highly efficient and diverse catalytic repertoires.


Assuntos
Domínio Catalítico , Coenzima A Ligases/química , Hidrolases de Triester Fosfórico/química , Engenharia de Proteínas , Acil Coenzima A/biossíntese , Acil Coenzima A/química , Catálise , Coenzima A Ligases/genética , Cinética , Mutação , Compostos Organofosforados/química , Hidrolases de Triester Fosfórico/genética , Filogenia , Software , Especificidade por Substrato
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